Publication
Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology 38, e2023PA004644 (2023)
High-Dimensional Chemostratigraphy of Pelagic Clay in the Western North Pacific Ocean Revealed via an Unsupervised Clustering Approach
Author
Yasukawa, K., Tanaka, E., Miyazaki, T., Vaglarov, B.S., Chang, Q., Nakamura, K., Ohta, J., Fujinaga, K., Iwamori, H. and Kato, Y.
Abstract
Pelagic clay constitutes massive and apparently uniform lithology that limits the stratigraphic correlation between neighboring sediment core samples. Recent studies on the pelagic clay in the western North Pacific Ocean demonstrated that the bulk chemical composition of sediments constitutes multielemental chemostratigraphy, deducing the correlation between visibly featureless pelagic clay layers across several cores. However, this heuristic approach utilized only a few elements. Therefore, this study employed multivariate statistical techniques, including k-means cluster analysis, to analyze the chemical composition data set of 1,646 samples × 41 elements of the western North Pacific pelagic clay. The pelagic clay was classified into 10 clusters systematically aligned from the seafloor to the depth in a specific order, constituting stratigraphic units that reflected the high-dimensional geochemical features of these 41 elements. This finding strongly supports the statistical robustness of the latent chemostratigraphy in the western North Pacific pelagic clay. Additionally, we performed Sr–Nd–Pb isotope analyses of the detrital silicate fractions of the centroid samples representing each cluster. The multi-isotopic features of the detrital fraction varied from a mixture of North American and Asian dusts to a predominance of Asian dust superimposed by volcanic inputs. This secular variation in the matrix components is attributable to the northwestward motion of the Pacific Plate and the time-varying influence of arc volcanism throughout sedimentary history. The proposed integrated approach of multivariate statistical and isotopic analyses effectively extracted the essential information hidden in the pelagic clay, which may postulate a new protocol for paleoceanographic reconstructions targeting the pelagic realm.